Kernel doesn't compile anymore, and it doesn't seem worth fixing it
again. The kernel has been added in 2017 as a stock mainline kernel from
that time with only two patches and wasn't maintained since then,
looking at git log --follow it was only patched to fix it up when
it didn't build.
As the device is a generic x86_64 tablet: if somebody has that
particular device, try to get the generic device-tablet-x64uefi running
instead.
The qbootctl service tells the bootloader that the current boot has
succeeded, so that the bootloader doesn't switch to the other slot after
~7 tries.
The swclock-offset dependency ensures that the time is set correctly
after a reboot, caused by the read-only RTC on Qualcomm.
[ci:skip-build]: already built successfully in CI
Patch header for 0027 was not formatted correctly. Fix that and
re-generate all other patches while we are at it.
[ci:skip-build] Already built successfuly on CI in MR
Also:
Fix camera on google-snow.
Enable video decoder.
Make boot.img smaller making kernel more modular and making FS-related
modules =y instead of =m (built-in file systems consume less space
than initramfs modules).
Reverts commit 70efe55031 for kernels that
started failing on bpo. I suspect it's caused by a change in binutils,
since I tried building linux-oneplus-billie2 with gcc6 and got the same
error (after trying other workarounds like disabling selinux for it, but
then it failed elsewhere).
We previously installed dtbs outside of the boot partition, so it
was necessary to copy them from the root partition to boot if you
wanted to utilise them in U-Boot scripts. This is no longer
necessary as we now install dtbs to the boot partition directly, so
remove this workaround and edit the U-Boot script to reflect the
change.
This device package represents several devices, so use plural form in
pkgdesc of APKBUILD:
pkgdesc="Google Hana Chromebooks"
However, when deviceinfo is already installed, it is intended to represent
only current device, so use singular form here:
deviceinfo_name="Google Hana Chromebook"
- update to use librem5-base v52
- install usbguard config / new subpackage
- move xorg.conf to new x11 subpackage
- refactor udev rule install to just install everything available from
librem5-base upstream
- use purism's shipmode script, see:
https://source.puri.sm/Librem5/linux/-/merge_requests/333#note_195511
Linux 5.18 brought better support for some x86-based Android tablets,
thanks to work from Hans de Goede. This includes asus-me176c: the
modified ACPI table and the Linux fork is no longer necessary,
it can just run linux-edge from Alpine.
Drop the old Linux 5.4 fork and related packages. Instead of using
the proprietary sound firmware from linux-firmware-intel, switch to
using the open-source(!) "Sound Open Firmware" (SOF).
NOTE: The mainline battery driver seems quite a bit less accurate
than the ugly old driver ported from the downstream driver. Also,
Bluetooth seems to fail on some boots now. Overall it works quite
well though. :)